You can't always trust
the poster for a boxing match. Often you have to take the
claims that they make with a grain of salt. But the sales
pitch on the ads for Mike Jones' post Fourth of July fight
poster turned out to be 100% true. It promised "The
Fireworks Continue". And they did, thanks to a revved up
Mike Jones and a very live Irving Garcia.

The two welterweights
staged a nice brawl Friday night (07/09/10) in the ballroom
of Atlantic City's Boardwalk Hall. The scheduled 12-rounder
for Jones' NABO & NABA belts went nowhere near the distance,
much to the delight of the large crowd that came to see the
man touted as Philly's next big thing.

After
a slow start in round one, Jones started loosening up, and
before long the promised fireworks were in full swing.
Credit should also go to his tough opponent who came to
fight, and may have lit Mike's fuse with his own stiff
punches early on. Garcia raised a swelling under Jones'
right eye and caught the rising star a few times with hard
shots. But Mike Jones was in a fighting mood and the
firepower he unleashed was just too much for Garcia to
handle. A volley of vicious inside shots in round five
decided the fight. Jones started his attack to the body and
finished with uppercuts and hooks to the head and another
body blow that dropped
Garcia in his own corner. Irving remained on his hands and
knees and took the full ten count from referee Randy Neumann. The time was 1:22. After
the end of the bout, Garcia's corner complained that the
body punches had strayed low. [Editor's note: Upon review of
a recording of the Showtime broadcast, it is clear that the
final blow was low.]

The victory made Mike
Jones 22-0 with 18 KOs, and kept him on his suddenly speedy
track toward a world title fight. His already impressive
ranking by the four major sanctioning bodies makes him a
lock for a big fight in the very near future. And although
it might be in his best interest to take a few more
developmental fights first, this young man is in a hurry. He
says he's ready to accept whichever opportunity comes first.

The
best part of this the fight was the way Jones performed.
It's been a while since I have complimented him for that.
But with this fight, he is due for a pat on the back.
Instead of the recent frustration of a
wheels-turning-overly-cautious-thinking-too-much-fighter
that appeared to be inviting a misstep, the Jones we got
against Garcia was the one we like. It was the Mike Jones we
really, really like. And it was the Mike Jones that has the
best chance to make some noise at the top of the already
noisy 147-pound division. Instead of waiting and thinking
and trying too hard, this Mike Jones just fought. After a
wary first round - when both fighters just circled each
other and barely stretched their jabs long enough to reach
the other, things got started in round two. Mike began to
jab and Garcia started to counter. The fight heated up
rather quickly. Garcia blasted Jones twice by the mid-point
of the second. It was at that very moment when Jones' game
clicked. He didn't over think it. He fired back. And he
fired back with glee.

One
of the most frustrating things about Jones' past year or so
has been his lack of emotion in the ring. He almost seemed
like a bystander in recent fights. And although he kept
piling up wins, he didn't seem to be enjoying it very much.
But this was not the case on Friday night. Jones tore
into his opponent. And for the first time in a while, he
really looked like a winner. The passion was there. And he
put it on display for everyone to see. That's what makes
fans take notice and that's what makes them root for a
fighter.

However, it wasn't
easy. He had to take some shots and get past that swollen
eye that clearly bothered him. But it almost felt like Mike
had reached a new level in his career. Perhaps he's matured
to the point where he's just going to be himself in the
ring. And as fans, that is exactly what we want.

In his interviews
leading up to the fight, Jones described himself as having
Tyson's power, Ali's jab, and the combinations of Roy Jones.
It's a good line, and maybe he believes it. But thinking
such things isn't going to get him where he wants to go.
When the time comes he'll have to rely on his own power,
jab, and combinations. There is only one Tyson, certainly just one Ali, and thank
God, just one Roy Jones. Mike Jones is not a Frankenstein
monster made up of all the best parts of past boxers. He is
Mike Jones. He has a great frame for the welterweight
division, excellent power, a good jab, and a mean streak
that when let out of the cage, can overwhelm any opponent.
We don't want those other guys. Besides, none of them were
Philly fighters. Mike Jones is. And he actually looked like
one on Friday night.

He
fought. He got hit. He got marked up. He worked through it.
And he won the fight doing what HE does best. Garcia was a
willing accomplice, but he too was fighting a plan that
might have worked for him. I had the fight close (2-1-1) after four
rounds. Garcia ruffled Mike's feathers, but he couldn't stay
in there with a guy that perhaps, is finally coming into his
own after all. His confidence seemed genuine in and out of
the ring. "If he had gotten up, he would have been knocked
out anyway", Jones said after the fight. No one could argue
with that.

I'm not sure Jones
should go for the title next. He's still improving and more
seasoning wouldn't hurt. But if he fights like he did
against Garcia, he'll prove to be a worthy challenger for
any of the top guys. And perhaps with another good night,
the same intense focus, and that beautiful passion that he
finally showed, maybe he can come away a champion.

Good job Mike. This is
what we want to see - Mike Jones being Mike Jones. That's
why all those fans bought tickets. And with a national TV
audience watching on Showtime, Jones picked the right time
to bloom. The Mike Jones story is getting good, and I can't
wait for the next installment.

Nine other fights
supported the Jones-Garcia bout.

The
evening started promptly at 8:30 PM with a four round super
middleweight fight between Atlantic City's Rafael
Jastrzebski (3-6-1, 1 KO) against the debuting
Phila-delphian Joe Dunn (at right with trainer Billy Bricsoe).
Jastrzebski won all four rounds and made Dunn look like he'd
chosen the wrong profession. The decision was a unanimous
shutout.

Next up, Camden's
Miguel Corsino halted Epi Cosme Rodriguez, of Harrisburg,
after two knockdowns just 58 seconds into their welterweight
bout. Corsino improved to 2-0, 2 KOs, while Rodriguez fell
to 0-3.

The
third bout pitted Josh Mercado of Cape May against North
Philly's Kywame Hill (at left with trainer Fred Jenkins) in
another welterweight fight. Mercado came away with the
unanimous points win and bettered his record to 5-1, 2 KOs.
Hill dropped to 1-5, 1 KO.

Anthony Caputo, of
Kennett Square, trapped Walter Edwards, North Carolina, on
the ropes in the second round of their scheduled four round
light-heavyweight affair, and convinced referee Steve Smoger
to stop it without scoring a knockdown. The time was 2:44.
Edwards was no match for Caputo as every punch landed was
like a brick. Caputo improved to 5-0, 4 KOs. Edwards went
home 1-5, 1 KO.

New Yorkers Steven
Martinez and Jason Thompson put on a good junior
middleweight show, trading shots until Martinez, of the
Bronx, finished Brooklyn's Thompson at 2:37 of round two. It
was the fifth straight win for Martinez. Thompson dropped
below .500 at 5-6-1 with 4 KOs.

Camden's Jason Sosa
pounded out a unanimous four round decision over Philly's
Bryheim Douglas in their junior lightweight match to go
3-0-1 with 1 KO. The disappointing Douglas fell to 3-4-2, 1
KO.

The six round bouts
looked to have had real promise going in. But Wilmington's
Ryan Belsaco won his decision over Philadelphia Kevin
Carmody in boring - but convincing - fashion. One judge gave
him all six rounds while the other two gave him five.
Belasco improved to 12-4, 3 KOs. Carmody lost his fifth
straight bout and by the end of the evening, found himself
10-13-3 with 1 KO.

As the 11PM Showtime
broadcast neared, the most interesting preliminary bout was
cut from six rounds to four to ensure there would be no TV
delay. But in the end, it didn't matter. These welterweights
punched like crazy and only needed two rounds to settle
things. Ardrick Butler, of Southwest Philly, scored first.
He dropped Manuel Guzman early in round one with a solid
right hand. But Guzman, Lancaster, PA, got to his feet and
toppled Butler with a ramrod jab. Ardrick stood up and won
the
round. But everything turned in the second. With time
running out in round two, Guzman cracked Butler with a right
hand that stretched him out flat on his back. Referee Steve
Smoger didn't hesitate for a second. He stopped the contest
as soon as he looked at Butler lying on the canvas. The time
was 2:53. It was Butler's second loss (5-2, 2 KOs) and
Guzman's seventh win (7-9-2, 3 KOs).

The opening TV bout was
a 10-round welterweight match between hotshot prospect and
potential future Mike Jones opponent, Antwone Smith, Miami,
and Lanardo Tyner of Houston. This one was a shocker. Smith
took round one, but Tyner started to batter the rising star
and built a solid lead. Smith fought back to win the fifth
and sixth rounds, but Tyner regained control of the fight in
the seventh and pounded Smith into submission at 1:15 of
round nine. Referee Earl Morton stopped it after a hard body
blow dropped Smith. Jones and Garcia followed this bout and
capped off a long but good night of fights.

______________________________________________________________

The card was promoted
by Peltz Boxing in association with DeBella Entertainment.
The crowd was near capacity. Lynn Carter, Emil Conforti and
Luis Rivera judged all of the four and six rounders. Steve
Smoger and Ricardo Vega alternated as referees.

The two main bouts were
refereed by Randy Neumann (Jones-Garcia) and Earl Morton
(Tyner-Smith). The judges didn't play into the televised
bouts, but George Hill, Donald Givens and Joe Pasquale
scored Tyner-Smith, while Steve Weisfeld, John Stewart and
Hilton Whitaker judged Jones-Garcia.